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Strategies & Market Trends : Zeev's Turnips - No Politics -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: orkrious who wrote (29219)2/11/2002 1:01:38 PM
From: Sam  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 99280
 
Ork,
In case you missed it on the AMAT--No politics thread:

From Barron's...

Subscribers: online.wsj.com.

Twice in recent months, we've relayed bearish musings on the
semiconductor equipment sector from Jim Covello, who tracks the sector for
Goldman Sachs. Last week, though, Covello switched sides. He now advises
over-weighting the group. Covello says he's suddenly seeing evidence of a
pick-up in orders, first from TSMC and UMC, the Taiwanese contract chip
makers, and then from the memory sector, where prices have firmed. He now
says equipment companies will experience 10%-15% sequential improvement
in orders in the first two quarters of 2002. And, Covello adds, improving
orders have historically meant rising stock prices.

Covello raised his rating on a host of equipment stocks, designating Applied
Materials as his single best idea. On Tuesday, Applied will report earnings for
its fiscal first quarter ended January. Covello expects Applied to break even.
The key number will be orders. Applied previous forecast $1 billion in orders
for the quarter. Covello thinks the number could come in higher, and figures
orders in the following quarter will be 10%-15% higher.

Covello concedes that the stocks are no raging bargains -- the consensus
view on Applied's October 2002 fiscal year is 21 cents a share, with $1.34
forecast for 2003. To justify a higher price requires using a multiple of "peak
earnings." Covello figures Applied can reach $3.30 a share in the next cycle.
He thinks Applied can rise from 40 to 65, but warns that in past cycles, most
of the move has come early. Miss the start of the rally, he says, and you could
miss the whole thing. Covello does say that the stocks are too high to
generate the triple-digit returns the sector has provided in past cycles. And he
warns that there is some risk that the current move is a head fake, and orders
will recede again in the second half. Nonetheless, Covello's a convert. Now,
he believes.



To: orkrious who wrote (29219)2/11/2002 4:38:00 PM
From: Justa Werkenstiff  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 99280
 
Ork: My, my what a sell job on AMAT today. Can they top that sell job tomorrow with more promises of good things to come <g>?